Thanks Kostis, you know how it is to experience techniques and effects, sometimes you achieve it in the first and others you have to do it several times and go correcting.
Fred,
I do not know if a satin varnish would work, because what I want is for the water to stand out as bright on a satiny base where it has not been wetted.
What I did was just give a base of satin varnish to the vehicle and bright barnish in the areas where the water has wet it.
MABO
I think that as far as I could get it right with the experiment it went to the paint base, before putting the resin and the glossy varnish.
The business is to mark well the places where the water will fall, for that those parts I have left more dark than in the parts where there will be no water.
For that try to put dust (classic dusty with oil), very clear colors, so in the places where the water falls, the plum has been removed and is a darker color
My english is so bad, Ill let some more pics befroe to add the resin.
Till there thing was ok.
Then I add the "water" and problme started.
To define the material:
Must be transparent
Must be brigth
Must be easy to apply with a brush or even with something as thin as a fine electric wire
Must have "volume" to mark a raindrop, and that the problem, not too much volume to look glossy.
The problem, at the end, is a question of "volume and density".
Yesterday I was tryng just with "withe glue", a bit dilute wit water, and it work bu needs more layers, is more tin, but needs more brigth varnish later. May be is an option.